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After their divorce, she married Jim Hagen and the couple run Natural Hoofprints, a natural horsemanship program, in California. Continuing on in her dressage career with Regallo, Linda realized her horse needed help. Regallo was struggling mentally to perform and was becoming dangerous to work with. Linda went out looking for ways to help her Thoroughbred.

She stumbled upon a video of Pat riding a horse bridleless and was immediately intrigued. Fortunately, she was able to attend one of his clinics in Australia.

At the clinic, Linda struggled with the first assignment. However, every time she tried, Regallo would bolt. Noticing her struggles, Pat took Linda aside and encouraged her to be patient and keep at it. More than an hour later, Regallo was able to relax. By the end of the day, Linda was able to ride him in just a halter while he remained calm.

After her first clinic, Linda was eager for more. A year later, Pat returned to Australia and Linda attended two more of his clinics. Pat accepted her offer and Linda became his Australian promoter. Twice a year he would return to Australia for a month or two and host clinics Linda had set up. Both divorced, they began a romantic relationship with each other.

Pat invited Linda to move to the United States with him and she happily accepted. The pair then began touring the country in an RV hosting natural horsemanship clinics. Shortly after they were married in As of , Pat and Linda are now divorced after 25 years of marriage. They have gone their separate ways in both their business and personal lives. Linda used her knowledge from her career as an education director in skincare to compose her writing.

Over time, her work became the manuals and pocket booklets for the first three levels of the Parelli Natural Horsemanship Savvy System. Her writings helped many students out and let the program continue to grow. So, Linda pestered her non-riding parents for one, and they relented. She preferred riding instead, and spent her weekends dragging her parents to pony club meets and competing in gymkhanas. If she did go to the shore, it was to gallop across the sand or swim in the ocean with Radar, her Arabian-cross pony, or Quarter horse, Khani.

But her childhood equestrian pursuits gave way to adult responsibilities. After high school, she spent two years at university as a scholarship student, majoring in education with the intent to become a teacher. With the hope of getting work as a movie makeup artist, she took cosmetology courses and became an aesthetician. She became their education director and travelled the world on a hectic schedule that kept her away sometimes for two or three weekends each month.

But there was a void in her life and a longing to ride again. She bought a racing Thoroughbred named Siren who proved he could run, so she and her husband at the time kept him racing. So she bought a second horse, Regallo. Although Linda wanted to do eventing, which consists of jumping, cross-country riding, and dressage, her riding instructor implored her to scale back her ambitions and concentrate on dressage.

The trainer felt that dressage might help make the horse manageable. Friends and acquaintances, however, felt that a better course would be to get rid of Regallo altogether. Linda said she consulted every book and watched every video she could get her hands on, trying to find solutions. Nothing seemed to work. Then, she watched a short video of an American horseman, a former rodeo cowboy, who was doing some interesting things with horses.

But then she realized that the cowboy, a notable but still relatively little-known clinician named Pat Parelli, was doing the riding without bridle or bit. I saw there was something big here, something I had to learn. At first, she thought she might spectate, but then decided that she should take Regallo, who to her mind was the one that needed help. The first exercise was to rub the horse all over, trying to discover spots that made the horse nervous or uncomfortable.

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I wonder why despite of years of living apart this divorce is occurring now. They both seem all about money. I bought my horse in June and started the annual trek to Equine Affaire in Massachusetts with a good friend. I knew who David was, of course, and enjoyed watching him train like his good friend Pat. I figured Parelli must be a pretty good trainer.

Fortunately I escaped before I got sold the bill of goods complete with a carrot stick. Most of his devoted followers never got beyond playing the 7 games. I should watch the DVD again. Josh won. Craig was okay but nothing stands out in my memory. Pat finished dead last, well behind Josh and Craig and well deserved. The more I watched the Parelli-ites play their 7 games the more relieved I was that I avoided him.

For years there were mile-long contentious threads on COTH and other boards excoriating Parelli while his defenders claimed he was the first coming of the horse-training deity. Hence my post 8. John Lyons is still my favorite. I finally watched Mark Rashid a few years ago.



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